If only
New User
Last year we put our horse in full livery at a professional show jumping yard while we were moving house. It was there for a couple of months when one night it got out from its stable by allegedly rubbing its neck against the Monarch sliding door and somehow released the mechanism (I can't quite believe this). It then got out of the barn in which in which the stables were housed. At some point during the night while he was wandering around unsupervised (it turns out he hadn't been checked for 14 hrs by the time they found him the next morning) he impailed himself on a latch of an open gate outside of the barn doors. ( so out of the stable, out of the barn doors which had been left open and then through another gate that had been left open).
Five days later my horse had to be put down due to the lung being penetrated which was heartbreaking.
Neither the yard owner or the show jumper who was supposedly caring for my horse took any responsibilty and indeed we were told that it is just ' one of those things that happen.' (I have my own private yard and none of my horses have ever escaped).
We took them to court and lost the case. The message to you all from the judge is that a livery owner is not responsible for a horse escaping whilst in their care and that it is quite acceptable that a horse can rub its neck on a stable door thereby opening it (if you have a monarch stabling system I would be interested to hear if you have experienced this - otherwise beware!)
Five days later my horse had to be put down due to the lung being penetrated which was heartbreaking.
Neither the yard owner or the show jumper who was supposedly caring for my horse took any responsibilty and indeed we were told that it is just ' one of those things that happen.' (I have my own private yard and none of my horses have ever escaped).
We took them to court and lost the case. The message to you all from the judge is that a livery owner is not responsible for a horse escaping whilst in their care and that it is quite acceptable that a horse can rub its neck on a stable door thereby opening it (if you have a monarch stabling system I would be interested to hear if you have experienced this - otherwise beware!)